This thread is for anonymously asking those ratardid questions about tones that make people look at you like you're stupid.

Hello, I am fairly new to music, having played guitar to about two years. Recently, I decided I wanted to start writing music. Particularly stoner/doom metal. I have a fuzz pedal and an EQ and I can get a fairly nice tone, however I can only get that good fuzzy texture at very high volumes and the feedback is fukcing annoying. I think what I want to do is get a volume pedal and use it to strengthen the signal from my guitar to my fuzzy pedal and EQ. Is this a good Idea? What would you reccomend?

Yea if this is going to be a thread on how to get good tones you best supply a list of what we(you) are dealing with so we might be able to advise you. Otherwise my answer would be.... get good gear= good tone.... to a degree. Cause if you don't know how to operate that gear then you are pissing in the wind.

I used to wonder why my old practice amp couldn't give me that chuggy swedish death metal tone, and bought and sold lots of pedals and pickups in a hunt for a better sound. But after the daily whipping sessions by my bandmates after I joined in, I could make the same old piece of shit sound pretty close to something like Into The Grave or Clandestine. As cheesy as it sounds, it's true. Your hands make 90% of your tone. Tony Iommi got Brian May to play through the former's rig, and it STILL sounded like Queen.

You didn't ask advice how to play better, that's what the guitar player's thread is for. and I agree with somefella, I went through the same thing as he did when I first started and slowly was able to work my way to what I wanted to sound like. After that, the gear was to tweak it to my own needs

that danelectro.. you can throw away I used to have a bunch their stuff and really it's not that great it really just made things turn to mush more so.

Some good basic tones with an amp like that are based around 1/3-2/3-3/3 tone settings with the bass, mid, and treble. Try have each knob turned at one of those amounts until you find one you like, so for example, turn the bass to 2/3, the mid to 3/3, and the treble to 1/3. That's where you should start.

Actually, play better is probably the best advice I can give you. There's a reason why Lord K Philipson or Ela Lindgren would sound better on your own gear than you do. Conversely, give a novice $10000 to spend on gear and he will still sound like shit. Effects are to help you shape your sound, rather than a magic wand that will transform muddy riffing or dirty shredding into virtuoso playing.